Doolittle) US Ninth Air Force (Tactical) (Lt. Eddy) Allied air forces US Strategic Air Forces in Europe (General Carl Spaatz) Lawton Collins) XVIII Airborne Corps (Maj. Horrocks) 12th Army Group Lieutenant General Omar N. Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary ForcesĪrmies deployed North to South: 21st Army Group Field Marshal Sir Bernard Law Montgomery UK XXX Corps ( Lt-Gen. See for Allied and German Orders of Battle: December 1944 & January 1945: (Tucker-Jones pp 263-287) This OOB - specifically, at a point near the end of the battle, which lasted from 16 December 1944 until 25 January 1945. On 18 January 1945, the alignment changed one last time, to XVIII Corps, US First Army, 12th Army Group - as it is given in the following hierarchy. On 20 December, the alignment switched to XVIII Corps, US First Army, 12th Army Group - and later that day to XVIII Corps, US First Army, 21st Army Group. Later that day, its alignment became VIII Corps, US First Army, 12th Army Group. For example, when the German attack began on 16 December, the US 7th Armored Division was assigned to XIII Corps, US Ninth Army, 12th Army Group. As with any large army organization in extended combat, forces and their assignments shifted over the course of the battle. The order of battle presented here reflects a point near the end of the campaign. In order to mislead any Allied intelligence personnel who might discover the plan, it was given the defensive sounding name Wacht am Rhein, meaning "watch on the Rhine". The Führer dismissed all objections, convinced that the elite German forces would roll over the war-weary and/or inexperienced American formations in the Ardennes Forest and drive all the way to the English Channel port of Antwerp. The plan was vigorously opposed by the two ranking generals who would oversee the assault, who saw only a waste of men and material with little chance of success. The operation was conceived entirely by German head of state and armed forces chief Adolf Hitler. The intent of the offensive was to split the ground forces of the Western Allies from each other and encourage them to make peace with Germany, leaving all of Germany's military might to fight off the resurgent USSR. The Ardennes Counteroffensive, commonly known as the Battle of the Bulge, was a massive military operation undertaken by Nazi Germany in southern Belgium and northern Luxembourg which lasted from 16 December 1944 until 25 January 1945.
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